Hong Kong is intensifying its efforts to become a premier offshore financial hub by proposing tax exemptions for private equity funds, hedge funds, and super-rich investment vehicles. The exemptions will apply to gains from cryptocurrencies, private credit investments, and other assets, according to a 20-page government proposal seen by the Financial Times.
The initiative aims to create a “conducive environment” for asset managers, positioning Hong Kong as a competitive alternative to rivals like Singapore. A six-week consultation period is underway, with plans to expand exemptions to include overseas property and carbon credits.
“This is an important step in boosting Hong Kong’s status as a financial and crypto trading hub,” said Patrick Yip, vice chair at Deloitte China, emphasizing the growing allocation of digital assets in family office portfolios.
Hong Kong’s push comes as it competes with Singapore, which has attracted over 1,000 variable capital funds since introducing a new corporate structure in 2020. Singapore is even taking steps for tokenized asset adoption and making a commercial network to advance the liquidity of tokenized assets. Meanwhile, Hong Kong has launched more than 450 open-ended fund companies under its own tax-efficient framework.
Amid increasing wealth scrutiny in mainland China and tighter anti-money laundering measures in Singapore, Hong Kong’s lighter regulatory touch aims to lure high-net-worth individuals and global asset managers.
KPMG’s Darren Bowdern noted the proposal brings Hong Kong closer to global finance hubs like Singapore and Luxembourg by eliminating the risk of tax exposure for funds.
UBS CEO Sergio Ermotti has also acknowledged Hong Kong’s growing prominence, warning Switzerland that it could lose its top wealth management crown as the Chinese territory and Singapore expand its influence.
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